d69d273e9c96844675d95fd13c858142.ppt
- Количество слайдов: 13
Ambient Intelligence Research Profile TU/e Matthias Rauterberg Department Industrial Design Technical University Eindhoven (TU/e) The Netherlands © 2004 TU/e, M. Rauterberg Department Industrial Design 1
Ambient Intelligence (Am. I) Am. I stems from the union of three key technical areas: • ubiquitous/pervasive computing • ubiquitous communication • intuitive and intelligent user interfaces The convergence of such technologies would lead to the development of a seamless environment that is constantly aware of the presence of people, their needs and desires and is capable of intelligently responding via intuitive and natural user interfaces such as gestures, speech, etc. The following issues have to be addressed as well: energy, environment, social sustainability, privacy, social robustness and fault tolerance. © 2004 TU/e, M. Rauterberg Department Industrial Design 2
Vision of the Future Ambient Intelligence: Electronic environments that are sensitive and responsive to the presence of people. Characteristics: Embedded, aware, natural, personalized, adaptive, anticipatory © 2004 TU/e, M. Rauterberg Department Industrial Design 3
Trends in User Interface Technology Mobile computing Transport © 2004 TU/e, M. Rauterberg Department Industrial Design Ambient rooms and Cooperative buildings 4
Worldwide Benchmark © 2004 TU/e, M. Rauterberg Department Industrial Design 5
PHILIPS Home. Lab © 2004 TU/e, M. Rauterberg Department Industrial Design 6
MIT house_n © 2004 TU/e, M. Rauterberg Department Industrial Design 7
Georgia Tech’s Aware House Technology Research Central Digital Family Portrait Aging in Place Gesture Pendant Family Intercom Graying of America © 2004 TU/e, M. Rauterberg Department Industrial Design 8
Fraunhofer’s in-haus © 2004 TU/e, M. Rauterberg Department Industrial Design 9
Panasonic’s HII © 2004 TU/e, M. Rauterberg Department Industrial Design 10
Fh. G-IPSI Roomware The Roomware® components were developed in the AMBIENTEdivision at GMD-IPSI in Darmstadt as part of the i-LAND environment (Streitz et al, 2001). Roomware® results from the integration of information technology into room elements as, eg, walls, doors, and furniture. © 2004 TU/e, M. Rauterberg Department Industrial Design 11
Microsoft Research © 2004 TU/e, M. Rauterberg Department Industrial Design 12
Office and Home of the Future • • Bill and Melinda Gates' $97 million house © 2004 TU/e, M. Rauterberg Main characteristics: Home automation is defined as a process or system which provides the ability to enhance one's lifestyle, and make a home more comfortable, safe and efficient. • Home automation can link lighting, entertainment, security, tele-communications, office automation, heating and air conditioning into one centrally controlled system. Department Industrial Design 13
d69d273e9c96844675d95fd13c858142.ppt